USA > North Carolina > Johnston County > Selma > Hill's Smithfield-Selma (Johnston County, N.C.) City Directory [1959] > Part 1
USA > North Carolina > Johnston County > Smithfield > Hill's Smithfield-Selma (Johnston County, N.C.) City Directory [1959] > Part 1
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Floyd
Prive Sons
HARVESTER
Trucks and Tractors
&rd are Groc es
FEEDS SEEDS AND GRAIN
Cotton Ginners
TEL. Woodlawn 5-2311 SELMA
CURTIS V. JOHNSON
GENERAL CONTRACTOR
N. C. LICENSE 2856
"We Cater To Home Owners SELMA, N. C.
TEL. Woodlawn 5-2248
BUIE MOTORS, INC. MERCURY - EDSEL - LINCOLN ENGLISH FORD LINE
420-22 MARKET ST.
DIAL WEbster 4-3151
F & P AUTO PARTS CO.
PARTS -- TIRES -- BATTERIES
WHOLESALE
116 W. Anderson St. cor. Pollock St.
RETAIL
Dial Woodlawn 5-2381
First-Citizens Bank & Trust Co. COMPLETE BANKING SERVICE
$10.400
IMAUL ANCI
CHPOUTON
(Smithfield)
TEL. WEbster 4-3181
241 MARKET ST.
Esso
JULIAN V. DEAN OIL CO. QUALITY and SERVICE W. Railroad cor. Graves Selma Tel. Woodlawn 5-3073
Essoheat Fuel Oil
TEL. Woodlawn 5-2282
(SEL MA)
Branch Banking & Trust Company
100 N RAIFORD ST.
1 -
BOTTLED or BULK 141 Market St.
CENTRAL CAROLINA GAS CO. QUALITY CONTROLLED (Smithfield)
Tel. WEbster 4-2533
REHABLE.
R
PRESCRIPTIONS
GROVER CREECH COMPANY TEL. Woodlawn 5-2316
DRUG
"PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS (SELMA)
CREECH
&
WOODARD JOE CREECH 126 N. RAIFORD ST
THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA
LUX
ELIBERTAS
THE COLLECTION OF NORTH CAROLINIANA PRESENTED BY Greensboro Chamber of Commerce
& Creech g Co.
n
Druggists
GROVER CREECH
C971.51 S76h 1959
FOUNTAIN SERVICE
+ RELIABLE . +
PRESCRIPTIONS
Medicines Sick Room Supplies Rubber Goods Baby Supplies Kodak Supplies
Kodak Development Stationery Cosmetics
Fine Candies Magazines
PRESCRIPTION DELIVERY SERVICE
126 N. Raiford St. Selma
TEL. Woodlawn 5-2316
HILL DIRECTORY CO.'S
A
B
Kornegay Electric Service
H. G. KORNEGAY, Owner
WIRING -- PLUMBING -- HEATING LIGHTING and PLUMBING FIXTURES
WELL BORING - SEPTIC TANK
CLEA
INSTALLING SEPTIC T.
ROCK, SAND, GRA
This book must not be taken from the Library building.
DEL
TRENCH DIGGIN
PI
Office
Nights, Holidays
Fitzgerald Street
SMITHFIELD-SELMA CITY DIRECTORY
C
SMITHFIELD
POPULATION 6,300
THRIVING COUNTY SEAT OF JOHNSTON
DURHAM (DUKE UNIVERSITY)
26
miles
CHAPEL HILL ( UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA )
25 miles
RALEIGH-STATE CAPITAL ( N.C. STATE COLLEGE )
Jo miles
SMITHFIELD
SMITHFIELD IS STRATEGICALLY LOCATED
* Just 35 Minutes from Raleigh, the State Capital *Within Hour or So of All Units of N. C.'s Industry-Serving "Research Triangle."
IDEAL FOR INDUSTRY-
Progressive town government providing up-to-date water, electric and other public services. Served by A.C.L. mainline railroad. Near Raleigh-Durham Airport. Intersection of major highway arteries. (U. S. 301 and U. S. 70). Served by leading truck lines. Productive labor supply vouched for by industries already established. Friendly atmos- phere for industry and its executive personnel,
IDEAL FOR LIVING-
Excellent schools and churches. Fine civic clubs, excellent libraries and other cultural advantages. Beautiful lake, good fishing, country club and golf course, Community recre- ation park. Friendly residential neighborhoods. Modern 125-bed hospital. AND THESE ADDED ADVANTAGES: Smithfield is close to major centers of government, business, culture and recreation. Near nationally prominent colleges and universities, near state capital, six hours by highway from Washington, D. C., 500 miles from New York, two hours from ocean resorts, five hours from famous Blue Ridge Parkway in western North Carolina mountains.
IDEAL FOR RETAIL BUSINESS-
Smithfield Is in exact center of county which produces crops and livestock valued an- nually in excess of $40 MILLION. A rich rural market.
Make SMITHFIELD Your HOME FOR BUSINESS OR PLEASURE WRITE Smithfield Chamber of Commerce C. HAROLD CREECH, Mgr. OR TOWN OF SMITHFIELD BEN BAKER, Mayor
HILL DIRECTORY CO.'S
HILL'S SMITHFIELD AND SELMA (JOHNSTON COUNTY, N. C.)
CITY DIRECTORY 1959
Containing an Alphabetical Directory of Business Concerns and Private Citizens, a Directory of Householders, Occupants of Office Buildings and Other Business places, including a Complete Street and Avenue Guide, a Numerical Telephone Directory, a Directory of Rural Routes and Much Information of a Miscellaneous Charater; also the
YELLOW PAGES With a Special ADVERTISING SECTION and a Complete CLASSIFIED LIST
FOR CONTENTS SEE INTRODUCTION AND GENERAL INDEX
ASSOCIATION
PUBLICO
NORTH AMERICAN
PRICE
189
$30.00
S
DIRECTORY
PUBLISHER
HILL DIRECTORY CO., Inc., Publishers 2910 W. Clay St., P. O. Box 767, Richmond 6, Va. DIRECTORY LIBRARY FOR FREE USE OF PUBLIC AT SMITHFIELD CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, 131 E. MARKET (Smithfield)
Member Association of North American Directory Publishers
Copyright, 1959, by Hill Directory Co., Inc.
HỆ
Section 28, Copyright Law In Force July 7, 1909
That any person who wilfully and for profit shall in- fringe any copyright secured by this act, or who shall knowingly or wilfully aid or abet such infringement, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, and upon conviction thereof shall be punished by imprisonment for not exceeding one year, or by a fine of not less than one hundred dollars nor more than one thousand dollars, or both, in the discretion of the court.
PRO PUBLICO COMO ASSOCIATION OF NORTH AMERICAN
1898
ED
DIRECTORY
PUBLISHERS
PUBLISHERS NOTE
The information in this Directory is gathered by an actual canvass and is compiled in a way to insure maximum accuracy.
The publishers cannot and do not guarantee the correctness of all information furnished them nor the complete absence of errors or omissions, hence no responsibility for same can be or is assumed.
The publishers earnestly request the bringing to their attention of any inaccuracy so that it may be corrected in the next edition of the directory.
Hill Directory Co., Inc., Publishers
INTRODUCTION AND GENERAL INDEX
HILL DIRECTORY CO., Inc., publishers of South- eastern Directories, present to subscribers and the gen- eral public, this, the 1959 edition of the Smithfield and Selma City Directory, which also includes rural routes emanating from the Smithfield and Selma post offices.
Confidence in the growth of Smithfield and Selma's industry, population and wealth, and in the advancement of their civic and social activities, will be maintained as sections of this Directory are consulted, for the Direc- tory is a mirror truly reflecting Smithfield and Selma to the world.
The enviable position occupied by HILL'S Direc- tories in the estimation of the public, has been established by rendering the best in Directory service. With an un- rivaled organization, and having had the courteous and hearty cooperation of the business and professional men and residents, the publishers feel that the result of their labors will meet with the approval of every user, and that the Smithfield and Selma Directory will fulfill its mission as a source of authentic information pertaining to the communities.
Five Major Departments
The five major departments are arranged in the fol- lowing order :--
I. THE YELLOW PAGES constituee the first ma- jor department of the Directory. This embraces a com- plete list of the names and addresses of the business and professional concerns of Smithfield and Selma, arranged in alphabetical order under appropriate headings-a catalog of all the activities of the communities. Pre- ceding this catalog, likewise grouped under appropriate headings, are the advertisements and business cards of firms and individuals desiring to present a more com- plete list of their products or services than is possible in the catalog itself. The Yellow Pages represent ref- erence advertising at its best, and merit the attention of all buyers and sellers seeking sources of supply or markets for goods. In progressive communities like Smithfield and Selma, the necessity of having this kind of information up-to-date and always immediately available is obvious. The Directory is the common intermediary between buyer and seller, and plays an important role in the daily activities of the commercial, industrial and professional world.
II. THE ALPHABETICAL LIST OF NAMES of resi- dents and business and professional concerns is the second major department, printed on white paper. This is the only record in existence that aims to show the
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INTRODUCTION AND GENERAL INDEX
name, marital status, occupation and address of each adult resident of Smithfield and Selma and vicinity, and the name, official personnel, nature and address of each firm and corporation in the communities.
III. THE DIRECTORY OF HOSUEHOLDERS, IN- CLUDING STREET AND AVENUE GUIDE, is the third major department, printed on green paper. In this sec- tion the numbered streets are arranged in numerical order, followed by the named streets in alphabetical order; the numbers of the residences and business con- cerns are arranged in numerical order under the name of each street, and the names of the householders and concerns are placed opposite the numbers. The names of the intersecting streets appear at their respective crossing points on each street. Special features of this section are the designation of tenant-owned homes and the listing of telephone numbers.
IV. THE NUMERICAL TELEPHONE DIREC- TORY is the fourth major department, printed on blue paper, covering Smithfield followed by a similar section for Selma.
V. THE RURAL ROUTES DIRECTORY is the fifth major department, printed on white paper, covering Smithfield followed by a similar section for Selma.
Community Publicity
The Directory reflects tlie achievements and am- bitions of the community, depicting in unbiased terms what it has to offer as a place of residence, as a business location, as a manufacturing site and as an educational center. To broadcast this information, the publishers have placed copies of this issue of the Directory in Di- rectory Libraries where they are readily available for free public reference, and serve as perpetual and reliable advertisements of Smithfield and Selma and vicinity.
The Out-of-Town City Directory Library
Through the courtesy of the publishers of the Smith- field and Selma City Directory, a Directory Library is maintained in the offices of the Smithfield Chamber of Commerce, for free reference by the general public. This is one.of more than 700 Directory Libraries installed in the chief. cities of the U. S. and Canada by members of the Association of North American Directory Publishers.
The publishers appreciatively acknowledge the rec- ognition by those progressive business and professional men who have demonstrated their confidence in the City Directory as an advertising medium, with assurance that it will bring a commensurate return.
HILL DIRECTORY CO., INC.
Publishers.
INDEX TO ADVERTISERS
PAGE NUMBERS LISTED BELOW REFER TO THE YELLOW PAGES
Bailey Sign Service back cover, left top lines and 54 Bell's Opticians left bottom lines and 52
Bingham & Parrish Insurance Agency Inc
front stencil and 39
Boyette Electric Co left top lines and 31
Branch Banking & Trust Co front cover, left and right side lines, 12 and 13
Buddy's Amoco Service 10
Buie Motors Inc. front cover, right top lines and 2
Busy Bee Oil Co back cover, left top lines and 34
Central Carolina Gas Co
front cover, right top lines, 16 and 17
Coble Dairy Products Inc
right bottom lines and
24
Creech's Pharmacy right side lines and 28
Dail's John Service Station. left side lines and 3
Dean Julian V Oil Co
front cover, right top and bottom lines, 35 and 49
Efird's Department Store left side lines and 25
F & P Auto Parts Co. front cover and 4
First-Citizens Bank & Trust Co
front cover, left top lines, 14 and 15
Fussell Cabinet Shop back lip margin and 19 Hall L H Metal Works
back cover, right side lines and 22 Heavner-Wallace Implement Co ...... left top lines and 33
Hill Directory Co Inc.
27
Hooks & Layne Oil Co
bottom stencil, left side lines, 36 and 50
Hooks & Layne Tire Co
top stencil, left side lines and 5
Hudson-Belk Co
left side lines and
26
Ideal Oil Co Inc ribbon book mark and 51
Johnson Curtis V front cover and 20 Kornegay Electric Service B and Z
Lee Guy C Manufacturing Co
back cover, left side lines, 18 and 44
Machine & Welding Co
backbone and
58
Medlin Earl Tile Co
Phillips Bill right side lines and
21
Pippin Motors Inc. left and right bottom lines, 6 and 7
Price Floyd C & Sons
cover, left and right side lines, 23, 38, 56 and 57 Smithfield Chamber of Commerce C
Smithfield Electric Supply Co
back cover, right top lines, 32 and 43 Smithfield Herald Publishing Co ...... left top lines and 48 Stallings Sam H & Son Insurance Agency left and right side lines and 40
Stancil Oil & Tire Co 37 Strickland Roy Lumber Co
back cover, left side lines, 46 and 47
55
Phillips Ornamental Iron .back cover,
right side lines and 41
front
X
INDEX TO ADVERTISERS
Thompson Airport Salvage Co Inc
Thompson Garage right bottom lines and 8
Vause G G
right bottom lines and 8
53
Wiggs Laundry & Dry Cleaners
.back cover, left side lines, 30 and 42
Williams Motor Co Inc left bottom lines and 9 Wilson Chevrolet Co 10 Woodard & Creech Drug Co
front cover, left and right side lines, A and 29
SMITHFIELD "THE FRIENDLY TOWN"
Statistical Review
Form of Government-Mayor-Commissioner. Incor- porated as a town in 1777.
Population-Last U. S. Census, 5,613; local estimate at present, 6,100. White population of age: Males, 1,681; females, 1,881. Total colored population, 2,009. Total number of males in city, 2,599; females, 3,014. Ameri- can-born population is 99% of the whole.
Area-2 square miles.
Altitude-146 feet above sea level.
Climate-Mean annual temperature 60.8 degrees F .; average annual rainfall 48.19 inches.
Parks -- 1, with total acreage of 14, valued at $25,000.
Assessed Valuation -- $8,600,000.00, with $1.00 per $100.00 tax rate.
Bonded Debt-$450,000.
Postal Receipts-$65,824.54 for year ended 1955.
Churches-15, representing 14 Protestant and 1 Catholic Church.
Real Estate-Number of transfers 50, valued at $500,000 in 1956. Number of homes and apartments 1700.
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Industry-Chief industries of the city and surround- ing territory are agriculture, tobacco, cotton, livestock, lumber, cotton yarn, spinning and cotton grinning, to- bacco processing and redrying and meat packing. Num- ber of manufacturing establishments 15, employing 900 men and 200 women. Principal manufactured products: cotton yarn, cotton and rayon jackets, ladies' and chil- dren's jackets, processed tobacco, meat products, lum- ber products, feed, guano, brick, tile and tin products.
Trade Area-Retail area has radius of 20 miles, and population of 60,000. Wholesale area has radius of 50 miles.
Newspapers-1 (semi-weekly).
Radio Broadcasting Stations-WMPM and WCKB.
Hotels-1, with total of 35 rooms.
Railroads - City served by 2 railroads: Atlantic Coast Railroad, inter-connected with Southern Railway Co.
Bus Lines-City served by 3 bus lines, as follows: Atlantic Greyhound, Carolina Coach Co. and Seashore Transportation.
Highways-The following highways run through, or to, the city: U. S. 301, 70, 210 and 96.
Air Lines-City served by 4 air lines as follows: Eastern, Capital, Piedmont and Private Airport at Selma.
Airports -- 1, Selma Airport, 4 miles away (private). Automobile Registration-1,500.
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INTRODUCTION
Amusements-Largest auditorium in city seats 900 persons. 1 moving picture theatre, with total seating capacity of 600 persons. 1 legitimate theatre with total seating capacity of 600 persons. 1 golf course, also Holt Lake with cabins, boats, swimming, fishing, dancing and skiing.
Hospitals-1, with total of 100 beds.
Education-Number of public schools 4; with 2 senior high schools. Number of pupils in public schools 2,976. Number of teachers in public schools 103.
Public Libraries-3, with total of 30,636 volumes. City Statistics-Capacity of water works (munici- pal) 1,000,000 gallons, with daily average pumpage of 500,000 gallons. Fire department has 18 paid men, with 1 station and 4 pieces of motor equipment. Police de- partment has 11 men, with 1 station and 2 pieces of motor equipment.
General Review
Oldest, largest and busiest of Johnston's ten towns, Smithfield is a county seat of 5,613 population. In 1890 it was only 545. Once it was a river town, and the Neuse still flows slowly along the west edge of its business sec- tion, but its commercial importance now is the potential it has as a source of industrial water. Smithfield's water facilities are adequate for an anticipated growth of 20 years.
Downtown Smithfield spreads east of the court- house lawn, and is a mixture of retail stores, farm equip- ment places and tobacco warehouses. Often in early sum- mer it is a tranquil place, but beginning in August it is a beehive. Tobacco is still the biggest thing in the life of the average Smithfield citizen. When the nine auction warehouses sell some 30,000,000 pounds, they turn loose $12 to $15 million, and a good part of it goes to Smith- field-either directly into the pockets of absentee farm- ers living in town, or indirectly via farm trade.
Tobacco is, however, an old story to Smithfield. In 1770 the legislature established a public "Inspection of Tobacco" in Johnston at the ferry on the lands of John Smith. Here tobacco was inspected, and put in stamped hogsheads. It was floated down to New Bern in flatboats. Consequently Smithfield is the oldest tobacco market in North Carolina, still in business, allowing, of course, for interims of inactivity.
The modern auction market opened in 1898 via a warehouse operated by Skinner and Barham.
The redrying houses, also operating seasonally, pro- vide the largest single source of employment in the coun- ty, aside from agricultural pursuits.
The cotton market, though overshadowed, is one of the largest in the state, with three gins and facilities for storing 18,000 bales. There is a large livestock market.
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INTRODUCTION
But recent industrial additions, such as Burlington Mills, the now-expanding Jerold Company (sportswear for women and children), and Carolina Packers are broadening the base of the town's economy.
Conscious effort by the citizens to accomplish just such a broadening has recently been stepped up by a re- juvenated Chamber of Commerce and formation of the Smithfield Industries, Inc., to provide quarters (if need- ed) for interested industries. It was instrumental in locat- ing the garment factory.
The town was fortunate to have one distinction. In all of its long career, and through every turn in business, it never suffered a bank failure. It is one of the financial centers of North Carolina, through the presence of main offices of the First-Citizens Bank & Trust Company.
The town was founded on land which John Smith, the first settler, donated. He had moved in from Virginia and obtained a license to operate a tavern at the site in 1765. Later he moved to Tennessee, where he died.
Smithfield was incorporated in 1775, and must have had some facilities and prestige during the Revolution. The General Assembly was to have convened in New Bern in April, 1779, but a smallpox epidemic forced them to meet elsewhere, and they chose Smithfield.
It was at this session that the representatives made the first attempt to halt the nomadic wandering which had the assembly meeting first in one place and then another. A resoultion was introduced naming a com- mission to "view and fix upon some place in each of the counties of Johnston, Wake and Chatham for holding the General Assembly."
Nothing came of this, and the resolution may not even have passed, for the Senate Journal of that session is lost.
However, when a capital site finally was picked, Smithfield was in the running. We frequently hear the town lost by only one vote, but the statement is always prefixed by the warning that it is only a "tradition."
Also according to tradition, a Smithfield man cast the deciding vote against location of the Southern Rail- way, fearing that the smoke and noise would be injurious to the quiet of the village. It later obtained the Atlantic Coastline. It is situated on U. S. Highways 70 and 301, with three bus lines and four truck lines.
Beyond the commercial center lie the residential sections, mostly composed of comfortable but moderate homes.
They are built along old tree-lined streets, and even though close to town have an air of leisure and well- being. Smithfield, for all its concern over the replacement of farm labor and the need for new enterprises, is a town of quiet poise. And it has, over its 200 years, gradually equipped itself adequately.
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INTRODUCTION
It has a small but good and well-used library; a handsome, relatively new hospital; a county-wide coun- try club nearby; a community center; a volunteer fire de- partment; and a school system so thorough it is said to send 80 per cent of its graduates to college.
The civic life is well balanced by organizations- civic, fraternal, cultural, literary, dramatic, professional. It has a city library and also is headquarters for a nine- branch county library system with bookmobile. A Histori- cal Society is busy compiling a county history. There are 15 churches and an 8-acre recreation center, operated by a summer-time city recreation department.
Smithfield's growth in size and responsibility has not robbed it of a social life which is as friendly and neighborly as that of the smallest rural community in the county.
Smithfield has a tax rate of $1; $8,500,000 valua- tion and $450,000 debt.
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SELMA
(Courtesy of Selma Chamber of Commerce)
Crossroads of Eastern Carolina is one of Selma's watchwords, because it is at the junction of the Southern and ACL, and on U. S. 301 near U. S. 70 crossing and one mile west of the new 95 interstate highway system. Six major truck lines serve Selma. Eastern, Capital and Piedmont airlines at Raleigh-Durham Airport are an hours drive from Selma. A private airport is maintained in Selma.
Selma has had a quiet but steady growth. The 1950 population was 2,639. Due to normal growth, and two areas coming into the city limits by petition and vote during 1957 and 1958, it is reliably estimated that the present population is 3,300. Only three miles apart and connected by highway 301-Selma and Smithfield are rapidly growing toward each other, and some day only a corporate limit sign will separate them.
Selma is the place to go if you want to see a mid- eastern North Carolina town at its best. The business area of the town is three blocks square, and contains an unusual assortment of stores and service establishments catering to the town and the farms in the area. The homes, some new, some old, are neat and along well kept streets. Buying income for the Selma trading area is $15,300,000 annually.
Selma is fortunate in having well diversified in- dustry. During 1957 the Selma-Smithfield Industrial De- velopment Corp. was formed and as a result, in 1958, Shallcross Manufacturing Co., manufacturers of elec- tronic components and switches, started operations in a new and completely modern building financed by pro- gressive business and professional people from Selma and the area. Griggs Equipment Co. started the manufacture of school, church and theatre furniture in the 80,000 square foot building formerly occupied by Selma Mills. Selma Soy Bean Corp. was organized, financed by local capital, and started producing soy bean oil and meal. Kingan Division of Hygrade Food Products, opened a sta- tion for buying cattle and hogs; Gurley Milling Co. manu- facturers of flour, corn meal and various feeds for a num- ber of years, also added facilities for storing 100,000 bushels of grain.
Other well known industries here are: Eastern Man- ufacturing Co., manufacturers of cotton knitting yarns; Perry Lumber Co., processors of a wide variety of pine lumber; Pepsi-Cola-Worley Beverage Co., bottlers of) Pepsi-Cola and a wide variety of other soft drinks; Vir- ginia-Carolina Chemicals Co., makers of fertilizers and other agricultural chemicals; and Floyd C. Price & Sons, one of the largest farm supply houses in this section. American Telephone and Telegraph Co. maintains a repeater station here for Telephone and Television com-
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INTRODUCTION
munications. The area is served by the Branch Banking and Trust Co., one of the state's largest banking and trust organizations, with resources of $98,849,648.49 as of March 31, 1959. The Johnstonian-Sun Publishing Co. moved into a new and completely modern building after more than 40 years in the original location.
Two of the best schools in the county are located in Selma and the Negro school, Richard B. Harrison, is the only Negro school in the county accredited by the South- ern Association.
Selma was recently awarded a plaque by station WNCT, of Greensville, for industrial progress in 1958, when more than 300 new people were employed with an annual increas in payrolls of over $1,000,000.
City government is progressive and is administered by a Mayor, Council, City Manager system, has a well- equipped fire department and efficient police protection with two-way radio. The tax rate is $1.15 with $3,312,- 498 valuation and a bonded indebtedness of $329,000 which includes $125,000 of recently issued water and sewer bonds for improvements with no increase in taxes.
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